Abstract

Through the lens of structural violence, Black feminism and critical family history, this paper explores how societal structures informed by white supremacy shaped the lives of three generations of rural African American women in a family in Florida during the middle to the late twentieth century. Specifically, this study investigates how disparate funding, segregation, desegregation, poverty and post-desegregation policies shaped and limited the achievement trajectories among these women. Further, an oral historical examination of their lives reveals the strategies they employed despite their under-resourced and sometimes alienating schooling. The paper highlights the experiences of the Newman family, descendants of captive Africans in the United States that produced three college-educated daughters and a granddaughter despite structural barriers that threatened their progress. Using oral history interviews, archival resources and first-person accounts, this family’s story reveals a genealogy of educational achievement, barriers and agency despite racial and gendered limitations in a Southern town. The findings imply that their schooling mirrors many of the barriers that other Blacks face. However, this study shows that community investment in African American children, plus teachers that affirm students, and programs such as Upward Bound, help to advance Black students in marginalized communities. Further, these women’s lives suggest that school curriculums need to be anti-racist and public policies that affirm each person regardless of the color of their skin. A simple solution that requires the structural violence of whiteness be eliminated from the schooling spheres.

Highlights

  • A simple solution that requires the structural violence of whiteness be eliminated from the schooling spheres

  • We explore the experiences of three generations of women in the Newman family who attended these schools in order to explore how structural violence influenced the efforts of these women to empower themselves through education

  • Contemporary scholars have investigated the impact of structural violence woven into many educational policies associated with the oppression of Latinx and African American students (Garcia-Reid 2008; Ladson-Billings 2013; Mustafa 2017; Oliver 2001)

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Summary

Introduction

African Americans refer to themselves as Black often.) desire for liberation (Anderson 1988) Many of those schools rested on a foundation of solicited funds from White northern philanthropists, such as the Rockefeller, Phelps. Board of Education, led Zora Neale Hurston to pen a letter to the editor of the Orlando Sentinel newspaper denouncing the damage done She theorizes the Supreme Court would have better served the Black community by reinforcing compulsory schooling for African Americans rather than integration (Hurston 1955). A lack of resources allocated for transportation, books, curriculum and other amenities necessary for preparing a well-informed and educated Black citizenry, harms students (Rooks 2017) This inequality remains firmly entrenched in institutional structures as evidenced by both poor urban and rural schools and the disparity in academic performance between groups of students, commonly referred to as “an achievement gap” (Ansell 2011; Kozol 2005a). We conclude this paper with implications of the women’s experiences for the larger community

Critical Family History
Structural Violence
Black Feminist Thought
Methods
Analysis
Agency and Dogged Determination
Findings
Implications and Significance of the Newman Women’s Stories
Conclusions
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